STATE OF CALIFORNIADECISION OF THE
PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS BOARD
DOWNEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, ))Employer, ))and ))
LOS ANGELES CITY AND COUNTY )SCHOOL EMPLOYEES UNION, LOCAL 99, )
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Employee Organization, ))and ))
CALIFORNIA SCHOOL EMPLOYEES )ASSOCIATION AND ITS DOWNEY )CHAPTER * 2 48 , )
)Employee Organization. )
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Case No. LA-R-346B
PERB Order No. Ad- 97
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEAL
September 10, 1980
Appearances: ,Linda Jenson Paterson, Attorney for DowneyUnified School District; Jeff Paule, Attorney (Geffner &Satzman) for Los Angeles City and County School EmployeesUnion, Local 99; Steven Nutter, Attorney (California SchoolEmployees Association) for California School EmployeesAssociation and its Downey Chapte.r iJ248.
Before Gluck, Chairperson and Moore, Member.
DECISION AND ORDER
The Los Angeles City and County School Employees Union,
Local 99, Service Employees International Union, AFL-CIO,
(hereafter Local 99 or SEID) has appealed the determination of
the Los Angeles regional director who, following a full hearing
on the matter, ruled that a decertification petition filed by
the California School Employees Association (hereafter CSEA)
and its Downey Chapter *248 was timely filed and not barred
pursuant to provisions of section 3544.7 (b) (1) of the
Educational Employment Relations Act (hereafter EERA) .
In accordance with the discuss ion below we aff irm the
determination of the regional director as set forth in the
attached decision.
DISCUSSION
In th is appeal SEIU urges that CSEA' s pet i tion for a
decertification election is barred by an alleged contract
between SEIU and the Downey Unified School District (hereafter
Distr ict) .
Unlike the National Labor Relations Act (hereafter NLRA) ,
EERA contains specific language definin~ the circumstances in
which a decertification petition wiii be barred.
Section 3544.7 reads in relevant part:
(b) No election shall be held and thepeti tion shall be dismissed whenever:
(1) There is currently in effect a lawfulwritten agreement negotiated by the publicschool employer and another employeeorganization covering any employees includedin the unit descr ibed . in the request forrecogn i tion, or unless the request forrecogni tion is filed less than 120 days, butmore than 9 a days, pr ior to the expi rationdate of the agreement; . . .
The petitioner, CSEA, argues that the cardinal requirement
for a contract bar has not been met in this instance because
there is no evidence of the existence of a wr itten, signed
agreement between SEIU and the District at the time CSEA filed
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the decertification petition. A complete contract signed only
by the District on September 17, 1979 was put into evidence at
the hear i ng. Other testimony ind ica ted that SEIU and theDistrict had tentatively signed off on all of the provisions of
th is contract.
It is unnecessary to decide here whether the ser ies of
"signed-off" provisions constitutes a lawful written agreement
within the meaning of the statute, for the question of the
valid i ty of the contract turns, in th is case, on whether it wasratified. By written and signed ground rules, the parties
agreed that "all agreements reache~ by the negotiating teams
for the District and for Local 99, shall be tentative until
ratified by the union and the District, respectively. ill .
Thus, by the terms of the parties' own agreement, the contract
could not become operative until it was ratified by both SEIU
and the Distr ict. 2
ISEIU Exhibit 1.
2We note that the hear ing off icer' s representa tion of therule in Appalachian Shale Products Co. (1958) 121 NLRB 1160 (42LRRM l506 J is incorrect. (See Hear ing Off icer' s ProposedDecision, p. 8). The rule is ". . . only where the writtencontract itself makes ratification a condition precedent tocontractual validity shall the contract be no bar untilratified" at p. 1162 (emphasis added). We note that ourapproach to th is case differs from the Appalachian Shale rule.Our exper ience to date does not persuade us that it isnecessary to adopt that rule. Where there is ample andunchallenged evidence that the parties agreed, either by wr itten
3
Although SEIU and the District claim that the first
ratification vote taken before CSEA filed its petition operates
to bar the petition, we find to the contrary. SEIU's intention
to cancel the first vote is evident from its written, request
that the Distr ict not sign the agreement until a second
r a tif ica tion vote could be taken. 3 That a second vote in
fact occurred also points to the nullification of the first.
The evidence does not establish that the employees were
informed that th is second vote was for any other purpose than
actual ratification or rejection.
These even ts, combined wi th the fact that SEIU failed to
sign the contract on September 17 when the Distr ict signed it,
provide convincing evidence that SEIU did not want the
ground rules or by a provision in the negotiated collectivebargaining agreement itself, that ratification was a conditionprecedent to the agreement, we discern no reason to distinguishbetween ground rules and contract prov isions. Both consti tu teagreements between the parties, and both should be consideredwhen deciding whether actions by the parties consti tute a bar.
3The letter to the District reads:
Because of the recent mail ballot election,it appears as though there has been someconfusion on behalf of our members on whatis or is not part of the negotia tedsettlement. Therefore, we must take thesettlement to an open meeting where allquestions and concerns can be answered in aclear and concise manner and another secretballot ratification vote taken.
4
agreement formalized in any manner until the second
ratification. Against this written and specific evidence,
Prete's testimony of his intention or understanding of the
purpose of the second vote is not persuasive.
Consequently, we find that there was no agreement in effect
between the parties at the time the decertification petition
was filed. The dec ision of the regional director is hereby
AFFIRMD.
PER CURIAM
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PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS BOARDOF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
DOWNEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT,
Employer,
and
LOS ANGELES CITY AND COUNTYSCHOOL EMPLOYEES UNION, LOCAL 99,
Employee Organization,
and
CALIFORNIA SCHOOL EMPLOYEESASSOCIATION AND ITS DOWNEYCHAPTER *248,
Employee Organization.
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RepresentationCase No. LA-R-346B D-48,
ORDER GRANTING PETITIONFOR DECERTIFICATION
(4/14/80)
Ap~earances: Linda Jenson Paterson, Attorney for DowneyUnif ied School Distr ict; Jeff Paule, Attorney (Geffner &Satzman) for Los Angeles City and County School EmployeesUnion, Local 99; and Steven Nutter, Attorney for cal iforniaSchool Employees Associ ation and its Downey Chapter *248.
Before: Bruce Barsook, Hearing Officer
INTRODUCTION
On October 5, 1979 the California School Employees
Association and its Downey Chapter *248 (hereafter cSEA) filed
a decertif ication peti tion pursuant to section 3544.5 (d) of the
Educational Employment Relations Act (hereafter EERA) 1 for a
lThe EERA is codified at Government Code section 3540
classified employees operations-support unit2 of the Downey
Unified School District (hereafter District).
et seq. All section references are to the Government Codeunless otherwise indicated.
Sec. 3544.5 (d) provides:
A peti tion may be filed with the board, inaccordance wi th its rules and regulations 1requesting it to investigate and decide thequestion of whether employees have selectedor wish to select an exclusi verepresentative or to determine theappropr iateness of a unit, by:
(d) An employee organization alleging thatthe employees in an appropriate unit nolonger desire a particular employeeorganization as their exclusi verepresentati ve, provided that such peti tionis supported by current dues deductionauthor i zations or other evidence such asnotarized memberShip lists, cards, orpeti tions from 30 percent of the employeesin the negotiating unit indicating supportfor another organization or lack of supportfor the incumbent exclusive representative.
2The uni t is presently composed of the followingclassifications: All regular full-time and part-timeclassif ied employees serving in the following posi tions:Senior Lead Custodian, Lead Custodian, Utility Worker, AthleticEquipment Attendant, Custodian, Lead Groundskeeper, MaintenanceGroundskeeper, Ground Equipment Operator, Groundskeeper, LeadEquipment Mechanic, Equipment Mechanic, Bus Dr i ver/Trainer ,Senior Bus Dr i ver, Equipment Attendant, Bus Dr i ver, VehicleOperator, Senior Stock Clerk, Stock Clerk, Lead MaintenanceWorker, Air Condi tioning and Refr igeration Mechanic,Maintenance Electr ician, Maintenance Electronics Technici an,Maintenance Plumber, Locksmi th, Maintenance Welder, Glazier,Maintenance Carpenter, Maintenance Painter, MaintenanceMachinist, General Maintenance Worker, Skilled Trades Helper,Lifeguard and Pool Attendant.
2
CSEA alleges that a wr i tten agreement entered into between
the Distr ict and the Los Angeles City & County School Employees
Union, Local 99 (hereafter SEIU or Local 99) for the term
March 6, 1978 to June 30, 1979, expired and that no successor
agreement was reached before CSEA' s decertification peti tion
was filed.The D istr ict and SEIU deny CSEA' s allegations and assert
that there is a two-year agreement ending in 1981 which bars
CSEA from filing a decertificåtion petition. As a result, the
regional director has instituted a hearing to ascertain the
relevant facts.The hear ing in this matter was held on January 14, 1980 and
post-hearing briefs were filed ,by the District and CSEA on
March 7, 1980.
ISSUE
1. On the date cSEA filed its decertification petition did
a written agreement exist between the District and SEIU which
would thereby constitute a bar to CSEA' s decertification
peti tion?
DISCUSSION
Fact ual Background
In April 1979 the District and SEIU began negotiations for
a successor to their 1978-79 agreement. Ground rules were
adopted and provided that "all agreements reached by the
3
negotiating teams for the District and for Local 99, shall be
tentative until ratifieò by the Union and District,
respecti vely. "
Negotiations continued through the summer. On
August 20, 1979 negotiations broke down when the District ISfinal proposal was rejected 5-2 by SEIU' s negotiating
commi ttee. Nevertheless, Pat Prete, SEIU business agent and
chief negotiator for the union, tentatively agreed to the
District's proposal on August 22.
In accordance with an agreement with members of the SEIU
negoti ating commi ttee, Prete prepared a summary of the
tentative agreement. This summary, along with the mail ballot
for the contract ratification election, was sent to SEIU
members on August 29.
Upon receiving a copy of the August 29 letter,
Frank Latino, a member of the SEIU nego,tiating commi ttee,
contacted Howard Fr iedman, secretary-treasurer of SEIU, Local
99, to voice some concerns he had with Prete i s summary of the
tentati ve agreement. It was Mr. Latino i s pos i tion that Prete
had failed to provide him with an advance copy of the summary
as Prete had promised and that the summary itself contained a
number of misrepresentations.
Mr. Fr iedman responded that because Prete was on vacation
any solution of the problem would have to wai t until after the
ratification vote. If the agreement were not ratified that
4
would end the problem, but if it passed, Mr. Fr iedman
indicated he would have to make a decision on what to do next.
On September 12, 1979, the ballots were counted and the
vote was in favor of ratification. Prete advised the District
by phone of the ratification.
The following Sunday a meeting was held with Prete,
Friedman, and the entire negotiating committee. The result of
the meeting was that on Monday, September 17, Mr. Fr iedman
decided that it would be in the best interests of the union if
a second ratification vote were held.
That evening the District was scheduled to ratify the
agreement and both sides were expected to sign the agreement
immediately thereafter. However, SEIU had determined that it
would not sign the agreement until a second ratification vote
was conducted and in a letter to the District SEIU requested
that the District not ratify the agreement that evening. The
letter reasons that:
Because of the recent mail ballot election,it appears as though there has been someconfusion on behalf of our members on whatis or is not part of the negotiatedsettlement. Therefore, we must take thesettlement to an open meeting where allquestions and concerns can be answered in aclear & concise manner and another secretballot ratif ication vote taken.
Nevertheless, the D istr ict proceeded to ratify and sign the
agreement at its September l7 board meeting. The terms of the
agreement were implemented the next day, September 18.
5
After the D istr ict' s r atifi cation of the agreement, SEIUproceeded to conduct a second ratification election. A second
ratification letter went out to members on October 1, 1979 and
the ballots were to be counted on October 12, 1979. In the
inter im, CSEA filed its decertification peti tion.
On October l2, 1979 the ballots of the second ratification
vote were counted and the vote was again in favor of
ratification. Mr. Prete signed the agreement the same day.3
Analysis
Section 3544.7 (b) (1) regulates the process ing of a
decertification petition filed during the term of a collective
negotiating agreement. It provides that:
No election shall be heid and the peti tionshall be dismissed whenever:
(1) There is currently in effect a lawfulwr i tten agreement negoti ated by the publ icschool employer and another employeeorganization cover lng any employees includedin the unit descr ibed in the request forrecogni tion, or unless the request forrecogni tion is filed less than 120 days, butmore than 90 days, prior to the expirationdate of the agreement.
3The face of the agreement indicates that the agreementwas signed September 17, 1979. However, the parties stipulatedthat Mr. Prete did not actually sign the agreement untilOctober 12, 1979, seven days after cSEA' s peti tion fordecertification was filed.
6
In interpreting section 3544.7 (b) (1), federal precedent
under the National Labor Relations Act (hereafter NLRA) 4
offers significant guidance.
Although there is no parallel language under the NLRA
establishing a "contract bar" the California Supreme Court has
stated that where the NLRA does not contain specific wording
comparable to the state act, if the rationale that generated
the language "lies imbedded in the federal precedents under the
NLRA" and "the federal decisions effecti vely reflect the same
interests as those that prompted the inclusion of the (language
in the EERAI, (then) federal precedents provide reliable if
analogous author i ty on the issue. 5 The statutory "contract
bar"language contained in section 3544. 7(b) (1) is quitesimilar to the contract bar doctr ine developed by the NLRB. In
addition, the PERB recognized in its decision in Bassett
Unif ied School Distr ict (3/23/79) PERB Order No. AD-63, that
NLRB precedent "serves to illustr ate the legislati ve intent
underlying section 3544.7(b) (1)." Consequently, it is
429 U.S.C. sec. 151 et seq.
5Fire Fighters Union v. City of Vallejo (1974) l2 cal.3d608, 616, 617 (87 LRRM 2453). See also, Faeth & McCarty v.Redlands Teachers Association (9/25/78) PERB Decision No. 72¡Sweetwater Union High School District (11/23/76) EERB DecisionNo.4.
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appropriate to consider federal precedent in determining
whether a contract bar exists.
The purpose of the contract bar doctrine is eloquently
stated in the NLRB' s An Outline of Law and Procedure in
Representation Cases:
The major obj ecti ve of the Board IScontract-bar doctrine is to achieve areasonable balance between the frequentlyconflicting aims of industrial stability andfreedom of employees' choice. This doctrineis intended to afford the contr actingparties ,and the employees a reasonableper iod of stab ili ty in their relationshipwi thout interruption and at the same time toafford the employees the opportuni ty f atreasonable times f to change or eliminatetheir bargaining representative, if theywish to do 50.6
In order to bar a decertif ication peti tion, an agreement
must be written, signed by authorized representatives of both
parties, have a defini te duration, contain substantial terms
and condi tions of employment and cover all employees in the
appropr iate uni t. Appalachian Shale Products Co. (1958) l2l
NLRB 1160 (42 LRR 1506).
In addition, where, as here, "ratification is made a
condi tion precedent to contract validi ty, failure to achieve
6An Outline of Law and Procedure in Resresentation Cases,Office of the General Counsel, National La or Relations Board(1974) p. 74; See also, Union Fish Co. (1965) 156 NLRB 187, 191(6l LRR 1012); Bassett Unified School District (10/9/79) PERBDecision No. AD-77.
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timely ratification of the contract, i.e., before the filing of
ratified the agreement. Even though SEIU had informed the
Distr ict that it had ratif ied the agreement on September 12,
1979, its decision to hold a second ratification vote coupled
with its request in writing to the District prior to the
District's September 17, 1979 board meeting that the District
delay ratification of the agreement pending the outcome of a
second ratification vote leads one to conclude that SEIU had
not yet ratified the agreement. 7 Consequently, because the
7in his testimony, Pat Prete claimed that the firstratification vote was never nullified and that the second votewas for clar if ication purposes only. This claim was disputedby Frank Latino who testified that Howard Friedman called himby phone and told him that the first ratification vote had beendeclared "null and void."
Mr. Prete's claim is undermined by his own admission thatSEIU would not sign the agreement until after the secondratification vote and by SEIU's attempt to convince theDistrict to delay its ratification of the agreement until afterthe second ratification vote. If SEIU believed the firstratification vote to be valid what would be the purpose ofhOlding a second but meaningless (ratification) vote, orrefusing to sign the agreement or requesting that the District
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agreement had not yet been ratified by both sides, there was no
agreement in existence and therefore no contract bar exists.
Because the agreement was not ratified in a timely fashion, it
need not be determined whether the parties had signed the
agreement in a timely fashion.8 Consequently, the District's
innovative argument that signed tentative agreements coupled
wi th ratif ication by the parties consti tutes a contract barunder the Appalachian Shale standard9 need not be addressed.
PROPOSED ORDER
It is hereby ordered that the decertif ication peti tion
filed by the California School Employees Association and its
not ratify the agreement pending the outcome of the secondratification vote.
For the above reasons, it is found that Mr. Latino'sexplanation is the more cred ible one.
8See Appalachian Shale Products Co., supra, 121 NLRB at1162, which provides that:
(A) contract to consti tute a bar must besigned by all the parties before a peti tionis filed and that unless a contract signedby all parties precedes a petition, it willnot bar a peti tion even though the partiesconsider it properly concluded and put intoeffect some or all of its provisions.
9Thus, If In order to cons ti tute a bar a contract need notbe encompassed wi thin a single formal document but may consistof an exchange of a written proposal and a writtenacceptance." Valley Doctor! s Hospi tal, Inc., d/b/a River sideHospital (1976) 222 NLRB 907 (91 LRRM 1334).
10
Downey Chapter #248 was timely filed and not barred pursuant to
provisions of section 3544.7 (b) (1) .
This Administrative Order shall become final on ADri1 24, 1980
unless a party files a timely statement of exceptions and
supporting brief within ten (10) calendar days following the
date of service of this Administrative Order. Any statement of
exceptions and supporting brief must be actually recei ved by
the executive assistant to the Board at the headquarters office
in Sacramento on Apr il 24, 1980 in order to be timely
filed. Any statement of exceptions and supporting brief must
be served concurrently with its filing upon each party to this
proceeding. Proof of service shall be filed wi th the Board
itself.
Dated: April 14, 1980 Frances A. KreilingRegional Director
-By
Bruce BarsooKHearing Officer
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PROOF OF SERVICE BY MAIL - C. C . P. 1013a
I declare that I am employed in the county of Sacramento, California. I am over
the age of eighteen years and not a party to the within entitled cause; my
business address is 923 - 12th Street, Suite 300, Sacramento, California 95814.
Ár,.q 1.6, lQRO
PETITION FOR DECERTIFICATION
On , I served the attached ORDER GRANTING
on the below listed parties
by placing a true copy thereof enclosèd
in a sealed envelope with postage thereon fully prepaid, in the United Seates Mail
at Sacramento, California addressed as follows:
Linda Jenson Paterson4030 Palos Verdes Dr. North, Suite 207Rolling Hills Estates, Ca. 90274
Downey Unified School DistrictAttn: Manuel Gallegos, Supt.ll627 Brookshire Ave.Dotniey, Calif. 9024l
Steven Nutter, Esq.California School Employees Assoc.2350 Paragon DriveP.O. Box 640San Jose, Ca. 95106
Los Angeles City and County SchooEmployees Union, Local 99
Pat Prete, Field Representative2724 W. 8th StreetLos Angeles, Ca. 90005
California School Employees Assocand its Downey Chapter #248
1120 So. San Gabriel Blvd., #230San Gabriel, Ca. 91776
Jeff Paule, Esq.Geffner & Satzman3055 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 900Los Angeles, Ca. 90010
I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct, and
that this declaration was executed, on April 14 , 1980
at Sacramento, California.
Marie S. Macaulay
(Type or print ,name) (Signature) "ERE-ii (10/76)